Page 7
The Voice
September 30,1981
Europe In The High Middle Ages
Cultural Lecture Series
The Cumberland County Public Library and Fayetteville Technical Institute
are jointly sponsoring a lecture series on “Europe in the High Middle Ages.” The,
six-part series, which began on September 23, will be held on alternate Wed
nesday evenings through December 2 at 8 p.m. in the Cumberland Hall
auditorium at FTI. All lectures are free to the public.
October Schedule
Oct. 7 - Lecture 2 - A Further View: The City of Man (James Barefield, Associate
Professor of History, Wake Forest University). Examines daily Hfe in medieval
times including feudalism and the Magna Carta.
Oct. 21 - Lecture 3 - Preserving the Flame (John Sullivan, Professor of
Philosophy, Elon College). Continuous information on civilization was preserved
in monasteries and later reemerged through universities.
COLLEGE POETRY REVIEW
The NATIONAL POETRY PRESS
announces
The closing date for the submission of manuscripts by College Students is
Novembers
ANY STUDENT attending either junior or senior college is eligible to submit his
verse. There is no limitation as to form or theme. Shorter works are preferred
because of space limitations.
Each poem must be TYPED or PRINTED on a separate sheet, and must bear the
NAME and HOME ADDRESS of the student, and the COLLEGE ADDRESS as
well.
MANUSCRIPTS should be sent to the OFFICE OF THE PRESS.
NATIONAL POETRY PRESS
Box 218
Agoura, Ca. 91301
American Collegiate ^oet^ 0int()olosp
International Publications
1$ sponsorinr a
j^ational College ^octrp ContC£(t
Fall Concours 1981
open to all college and university students desiring to have their poetry
anthologized. CASH PRIZES will go to the top five poems:
$100
$50
$25
Si 5
$10
First Place
Second Place
Third Place
AWARDS of free printing for ALL accepted manuscripts in our popular,
handsomely bound and copyrighted anthology, AMERICAN COLLEGIATE
Deadline: October 31
CONTEST RULES AND RESTRICTIONS:
1. Any student is eligible to submit his or her verse.
2. All entries must be original and unpublished.
3. All entries must be typed, double-spaced, on one side of the page only.
Each poem must be on a separate sheet and must bear, in the upper left-
hand corner, the NAME and ADDRESS of the student as well as the
COLLEGE attended. Put name and address on envelope also!
There are no restrictions on form or theme. Length of poems up to
fourteen lines. Each poem must have a separate title.
(Avoid "Untitled"!) Small black and vvhite illustrations welcome.
The judges' decision will be final. No info by phone!
Entrants should keep a copy of all entries as they cannot be returned.
Prize winners and all authors awarded free publication will be notified
immediately after deadline. I.P. will retain first publication rights for
accepted poems. Foreign language poems welcome.
There is an initial one dollar registration fee for the first entry and a
fee of fifty cents for each additional poem. It is requested to submit
no more than ten poems per entrant.
All entries must be postmarked not later than the above deadline and
fees be paid, cash, check or money order, to:
INTERNATIONAL PUBLICATIONS
P. O. Box 44927
Los Angeles, CA 90044
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
October 27,1981
George Riobikoff
Pianist
Rosenthal Duiiding
8:00 P. M.
November 19,1981
United States Navy Bond
Seabrook Auditorium
8:00 P. M.
January 19,1982
North Carolina Symphony Chamber Orchestra
Seabrook Auditorium
8:00 P. M.
February 1982
Lecture
John Hope Franklin
Noted IHistorian
Butler Theater
TD A
February 16,1982
Shaw Players & Company
"The Wiz"
Seabrook Auditorium
8:00 P. M.
FOR INFORMATION, CONTACT IRV VEAZIE, 486-1166
Fayetteville State University Is a constituent ot The University of Nortt^ Carolina.
MOVIES
For You
Thursdoy, October 8
Goodbye Bruce Lee
Bruce Lee died q death os mysrerious os his mostery of ttie rrxjrTlol
arts. Doskeltxall superstar Koreem Abdul Jobber, Lee's friend, folks
about the circurrstonces surrounding Lee's mysterious deoth os well
os his beginnings in the ghettos of Hong Kong and Son Froncisco. CAST:
Bruce Lee, Koreem Jobbor, Lee Roy, Johnny "Big" Royd.
Thursdoy, October 15
Bad Day At Black Rock
One-ornned karate experr Spencer Trocy unearths some unpieosonr
frutfis in this tense my^eiy-dromQ which explores ftie treorment of
Joponese-Americons during Worid War II. CAST; Spencer Trocy, Robert
Ryan, Lee Mon/in.
Thursdoy, Oaober 22
Goodbye Mr. Chips
In this updated musical version of Jomes Hilton's novel, OToole is tf>e
dedicated classics master in on English boy's school in tfie 1920's.
CAST; Peter OToole, Pefulo Clark, Michael Redgrove.
Fridoy, October 30
Invasion of the Body Snatchers
A small tcjwn California doaor notices a gradual and eerie change in
everyone around him. As the loss of will and emotion becomes
epidimic, tfie doctor realizes that the vicfims hove become possessed
by outer-spoce invaders. CAST: Kevin AAcCorthy, Dono V/yner, Corotyn
Jones.
PRESENTED BY IHE RUDOLPH JONES STUDENT CENTER
All Movies v^ill be shown or 7:00 pjn. in the Multi-Purpose Room of the Studenf
Center.
From
Grassroots
(Continued from page 3)
Education’s Assistant Secretary for
Civil Rights, justified the plan with the
remark “government fiat is not the
only way to enforce civil rights laws.”
Yet Bush’s address at Tuskegee In
stitute had a disturbing historical
precedent. In November, 1898,
another conservative Republican,
William McKinley, made a political
soujourn to that Black college com
munity. Tuskegee Institute President
Booker T. Washington came to
national prominence several years
before by issuing his “Atlanta Con-
mpromise” address which accepted the
legal segregation of the races in return
for Black economic and educational
benefits.